Category Archives: The Candy Store Generation

Stewardship of my writing time

Every now and then I make a post like this, so my loyal fan(s) will know that I’m not a slacker. Well, at least not a big slacker; maybe just a little slacker. Over the last month I have been much engaged in publishing tasks, less so in writing.

As I’ve reported previously, I’ve been working with the graphics in the print version of my book The Candy Store Generation. This took up a lot of my time over the last two weeks. That’s now behind me, however, as our company’s graphic arts gal, Lee Ann Gray, volunteered to do the work needed. I worked with her. She had them all done, until I realized I had given her the wrong size for the book. So she re-did them.

But when I uploaded them, I realized I still had them a half-inch narrower than they could be. I didn’t have the heart to ask her to do them over, so I left them like that. I inserted them in the Word document, uploaded it to CreateSpace, did all the formatting stuff including on-line proofing, and ordered the proof copy. A few graph that were website captures are still at a low resolution, but I don’t care. I just want to get it published.

I also ordered a copy of the home school edition of Documenting America. I actually finished the edits to this a couple of weeks ago, but hadn’t decided if I’d bother with another proof copy or not. This book has also been frustrating in that I can’t seem to contact any local home school people for marketing purposes. I go to the websites of the groups, get contact information, send out e-mails, and either get no response or an auto-response that the e-mail address is invalid. I have no sales of it in electronic format, so have few hopes I can sell it in paper format. Oh, well, it will be available should I ever figure out how to market it.

I had conversations with two different cover designers for In Front of Fifty Thousand Screaming People. My son had said he would do it, but his life as a young professional and new homeowner is incredibly busy. Thinking he wouldn’t come through, I contacted another man. I told my son about it, and he came through with a draft cover. It’s a good start, and actually good enough if I never got another one. But he’s going to tweak it some. So I’m getting very close to publishing this, at least in e-book formatting. I have one mini-scene to add to the text, which I’ll complete today.

I have done some writing this week, on two different thing. I wrote a short story titled “Whiskey, Zebra, Tango”. I began it last Monday and finished it yesterday at about 6,400 words (perhaps 25 printed pages). My intention is to publish this as an e-book only, and attempt to do a simple cover myself. I want to get FTSP out first, then this.

The other thing I worked on is my spoof of the civil engineering industry. Titled The Gutter Chronicles: The Continuing Saga of Norman D. Gutter, E.I., I use situations from my career and put them in the life of the unfortunate Mr. Gutter. I had 11 episodes (i.e. chapters) written as of a few years ago. I never planned on publishing it, but lately I’ve been circulating copies of it to a new batch of CEI employees. That made me realize I had a bunch of words written that could easily be transformed into an e-book. I’m adding four new chapters, one of which is done and another of which is 500 words from being done. The other two are outlined, so completion isn’t far away, maybe three weeks or so.

So that’s where I stand. I hope the next four weeks can be as productive as the last four. If they are, my list of titles for sale will climb from six to nine.

Mixing Publishing and Writing

Three days and no blog post. Experts in the publishing industry suggest keeping a blog updated more frequently than that. I’ve been very busy, mostly with publishing activities. The graphics for The Candy Store Generation continue to haunt me, sapping my time and energy. I can’t remember specifics of all I’ve written here, so I won’t say much; just that in the attempt to improve the graphics myself, I clicked on a disguised link and downloaded a particularly nasty virus. I think that is now all behind, and the computer restored with the help of on-line technicians.

But the bad graphics are still with me. Over the last couple of days a woman in my office is helping me. She’s our graphic arts person, the one who does the detailed work on our marketing materials. I had thought about asking her, but that would have meant asking her to use company computers and software for personal use. I can do that myself within corporate guidelines for that behavior, but didn’t want to ask another to do that.

She took my Excel graphs and went through the process: create the PDF at 300 dpi or better; load it in Photoshop to crop, resize, and save as a jpeg (rather than as a TIFF); shoot it back to me to insert in the drawings. Except when I printed them at book size, in both black & white and color, the grid lines of the graph had disappeared.

She and I looked at it and decided I needed to thicken the grid lines in Excel. They could be thickened in Photoshop, but that would put the work on her, not me. So I did that to one graph, send it to her, and in less than three minutes she sent me the jpeg, but without the resizing. It’s critical to do the resizing in the graphic arts program because any resizing in Word destroys the dpi settings.

So today I’ll have her resize that one graph and print it. If it seems to be okay, I’ll fix the grid lines in the other graphs on my noon hour and get them to her. By the end of the day I’ll have those nine or so graphics at print quality. Three are already there. That will leave the things I received from CBO or captured from websites. I think only two or three of those are what I would consider poor quality. I’ll have to make a decision at that point.

In all of this I haven’t really felt like writing—until last night. I find the tasks of writing and publishing don’t mix well for me. Kind of like when I was doing construction observation half-days. I found I couldn’t concentrate on office things the other parts of the day; my work suffered. I’ve found the same is true with writing and publishing.

But last night I put all publishing tasks aside and decided just to write. I went back to the short story I started a few weeks ago, left hanging at 1,050 words, at the end of the first scene. I re-read that and made some good corrections. Then I tackled the next scene. In not too much more than an hour of writing, that was done and the story stands at 1,950 words. I may re-read it tonight and think it’s junk, but I’m pleased with that.

Tonight I may switch back to some publishing things. Or maybe I’ll add one small scene to In Front of Fifty Thousand Screaming People. Either way, I feel much, much better about my writing life after the last two days. Maybe I’ll make it.

 

Crossroad on “The Candy Store Generation”

To make the internal graphics better on The Candy Store Generation, I have to go through the following process.

1. Save the graphic as a PDF file, making sure the quality is at least 300 dpi, and using certain other settings. But since I have no program on my home computer that would create a PDF, I first had to make a decision: buy an Adobe product that will make a PDF or find a free PDF maker. I went for the latter with PDF995. We use this program at work, so I felt it was safe. Except somehow I didn’t download the right thing. When I tried to make a PDF it didn’t work. It took me two or three sessions on the PDF995 site before I could figure it out and download the correct program.

2. Open the PDF file in a graphic arts program. Crop it. Resize it to the size it will be in the print book. Somehow maintain the dpi quality.

3. Save it as a TIFF file.

4. Replace the inferior jpeg in the Word file with the TIFF.

5. Repeat for 9 graphs generated in Excel, and about the same number captured from web sites or sent to me by the Congressional Budget Office.

6. Decide whether to send the book file as a Word DOC or as a PDF. They recommend PDF, but Word seems to work.

Except, I have no graphic arts software on my computer at home (nor at work), so I either need to buy a product (such as Adobe Photoshop) or use a free one (such as GIMP). Supposedly you can download a simple Photoshop product for a 30 day free trial, but I couldn’t find such a link.

So I decided to download GIMP. It comes highly recommended by many in the self-publishing part of the writing industry. Except, once again, I somehow clicked on the wrong link. The GIMP site was very busy, with multiple choices for downloads. I downloaded the wrong program, not the graphic arts program but a file manager of some kind.

I was then looking at the GIMP site to figure out what the right download was, when suddenly a program called PC Optimizer Pro started scanning my computer for problems. That was not a program I downloaded, either with PDF995 or GIMP. While that was running I checked it out through some Internet security sites. The program isn’t malware, but it was described as being a web security program of modest value. I stopped the scan, uninstalled PC Optimizer, uninstalled the file manager, and tried to figure out why a new search box has shown up on the bars at the top of the screen. When I uninstalled one of those programs, I had a message about the uninstall not being final until I rebooted.

So I went back to GIMP, opened it, opened one of my PDF graphs, and was stunned. On the screen were hundreds of choices for what to do with this graph. The manual was 28 mb, so quite long and involved. I spent a couple of hours going through to see how to do the very simple task of saving a PDF file as a TIFF after cropping and resizing it, while maintaining at least 300 dpi.

I sort of achieved that for one of the graphs, I think. I opened it, figured how to crop it, resized it to 3.25 inches horizontal, keeping the aspect ratio the same. When I did that the dpi dropped from 300 to 289. I’m not sure why that happened, but I decided to leave it. Then, after much tribulation, I learned I don’t save it as a TIFF, I export it as a TIFF. I did that, and think I saved it as such. But when I decided to exit GIMP it gave me a warning box that my file wasn’t saved. I didn’t know if this was the TIFF file or the original file. Some other photo manager programs that come with my computers both at home and at work do that. If you open a photo and change it and save it as a new file, it still warns you that the original file was modified and not saved. It’s an idiotic notice and quite frustrating. I decided to ignore that and exit anyway, figuring I could re-crop and re-size, and re-export to TIFF again if necessary.

However, upon rebooting, I couldn’t get anything to open: not Internet Explorer, and not Word. At least not in a reasonable time, say five minutes. At that time, not having a hammer handy with which to render my computer, dual monitors, router, and modem senseless, I went upstairs to fix supper, never again to return that evening.

I don’t know what’s going to happen tonight. Will I go downstairs and find IE and Word opened in my absence? Will I find that the uninstall process of those two programs ruined my operating system? Will I lose everything on that computer by having to use a system restore? And will I ever learn any of this stuff well enough that I can a) finish the print book and b) not make mistakes that will harm my computer?

So frustrating.

A Day of Accomplishment

It’s 6:09 p.m. as I begin to write this, on Saturday afternoon. While there are still hours left in the day, I can look back on what I have done so far and say this was a day of accomplishment.

I should have written down what I did. I’m very sleepy right now, and the list of things done would help me recount them. Maybe I can work backwards. I spent the afternoon working on layout of the print version of Documenting America – the Homeschool Edition. That is done, sitting on my computer. I’ll want to give it one more go, and maybe play with the margins a little. It’s up to 234 pages long, a little longer than I expected. I think I indented some quoted items too much, but can easily play with that and finalize it in less than an hour. I’m still waiting on the cover, so I’m ahead of where I need to be on this one.

Earlier I formatted the same book for Smashwords and uploaded it. It seems I did everything right, because it generated no error messages. It’s already listed for sale on Smashwords, though I have to wait and see how it does with premium catalog distributions.

Before that I re-did some of the interior of the print version of The Candy Store Generation, and uploaded it to CreateSpace. Or maybe I did that last night. Whatever. I received back an error message saying that the cover didn’t work because it didn’t have any bleed around the edges. I contacted the cover designer and she said she’d make that correction this weekend.

Before that, maybe last night, I completed a look through Doctor Luke’s Assistant to see what kind of marks Lynda made on her recent read-through/edit. They aren’t too bad, requiring less than one evening of typing. I may do that in a couple of days, then re-upload it to Kindle and add it to Smashwords. I’ll even look at a print version, but I’m afraid it’s too long to be economical at POD book costs.

I started the day reading in a couple of psalms and praying, then reading 15 pages in a novel I’m reading for pleasure. I’m only 1/3 of the way through it, so I need to be reading more.

For tonight, I have a Sunday School lesson to preview for tomorrow, and will have to fix my own supper with Lynda gone. Then I may do the first typing on the short story I’ve been playing around with on paper. It will be good to be doing the work or a writer for a couple of hours, rather than of a publisher.

So Much To Learn

Two weeks ago I set most writing tasks aside to concentrate on publishing The Candy Store Generation. Working with Rik Hall, a book designer, on some interior design elements, I was able to upload the e-book to Kindle a week ago today and it went live last Saturday. A couple of days later I had the Smashwords file and uploaded that.

That left the print book to work on. I was waiting on the print book cover, but that didn’t stop me from formatting the inside of the book. I was determined to do the best I could with this before sending it on to Rik. I figured this wasn’t my first print book to format. I did Documenting America by myself. The main difference with CSG is the many graphics.

So I set to the formatting, completed it on Tuesday, and sent it off. On Wednesday Rik said it looked pretty good, though he had some suggestions for improvement. I made the changes and sent it on Wednesday. On Thursday he told me he thought it was ready to go. Also on Thursday I received the print book cover from Vicki. So Thursday night was upload night.

The cover uploaded fine. The book interior uploaded fine. But CreateSpace has a new feature. Some software on their end cruches for a couple of minutes, checking your interior. It then gives you a report on whether it finds any problems with the layout of the interior. In my case, it found 12 problems, most dealing with the graphics. Those relating to the size of the graphics (inches or pixels) I can handle fairly easily. But two are proving difficult.

One was that the fonts are not “embedded.” The message is a warning. It says CS can pick the fonts, but that it would be better if they are embedded. The problem is, both my MS Word and my Adobe Acrobat are set up to automatically embed fonts. So when I created and saved the document in Word, the fonts should have been embedded. Then when I used Acrobat to create the PDF file, the fonts should have been embedded. So why weren’t they? A check of Adobe help forums suggests that the plug-ins used with Word to create a PDF are the problem. While Acrobat is the program I used, I did it by clicking a simple button within Word. Maybe that’s the problem.

The other problem is that all my graphics are not of the quality they suggest for print. The are in the 100-200 dpi range, whereas CS suggests using 300 dpi or better. I’m using Word 2003, and it automattically resizes imported images to be 200 dpi. I spent two to three hours in Word help and on-line help and forums and I haven’t found anything yet to tell me how to get around this. A writer friend said she got the same error message about photo quality, decided to print anyway, and it worked fine.

Today I went ahead and completed the upload. It’s now in a 48 hour period where someone or something is further checking the book to make sure it can be printed as uploaded. After that I’ll order the proof copy, and see how it looks. Perhaps the graphs will be fine. Or perhaps I’ll have to get a graphics editor, something better than Paint, and learn how to use it.

Which brings me to the learning part. When I was querying agents and editors, and pitching to them, and submitting proposals and partial or full manuscripts, there was much to learn about that whole process. Now that I’m self-publishing, both e- and print, I have a whole new batch of things to learn. I can’t say that I’m looking forward to the learning process, but know I will be the better for it.

THE CANDY STORE GENERATION

I have been quite busy with publishing tasks lately, a consequence of which is I’ve neglected my blogs. The end is not yet, however. Today, I hope, I will finish all the work required for the print book and perhaps upload it tonight. That depends on getting the cover for the print book. I think it will come today.

The official publication date for The Candy Store Generation: How the Baby Boomers are Screwing Up America is July 14, 2012. Bastille Day. I didn’t think about that at the time. That’s the fifth work I’ve self-published, with two more to come within a month, and maybe two or three more short items after that. At least, that’s the plan. I may be sick of publishing business after the first couple and find it difficult to do the rest without a break first.

As of this writing I have three sales of TCSG. Amazon algorithms seem to have gone haywire, because those three sales put it at #14 and #16 on its genre bestseller listings. Doesn’t seem possible, but I’ll enjoy it while it lasts.

Status of Writing Projects

As of last Thursday or Friday, I finished the bulk of the text on my non-fiction book, The Candy Store Generation. I still have three chapters to tweak a little, where I’ve thought of something to add but haven’t done it yet. I started on one of those places yesterday. These will be enhancements or completion of thoughts I left hanging. After that, it’s print and re-read. My main fear is I have repeated myself extensively, and a 40,500 word book only needs to be 35,000. It will take several nights reading almost continuously to know that.

At that point I hope to improve some of the graphics. Several are copied from Congressional Budget Office reports available on-line. Most of them turned out well, but a couple are blurry because they are of poor quality in the original. I contacted CBO last week about getting some clearer copies. Six days later and no word yet. If I don’t get better graphs, I can go with those I have. And, I can always contact my congressman. His local office is only three or four miles from my office.

Yesterday I sent the manuscript for TCSG to a book designer, to let him assess whether the graphics will give problems for an e-book, as well as to give me a cost for the internal design/formatting. I formatted the four items myself that I currently have listed, but don’t think I want to tackle this one. I have the e-book cover in-hand, but not the print book cover yet.

In Front of Fifty Thousand Screaming People is done, and is with an editor right now. Today is day fourteen of the wait. Although this micro-press is considering it, I’m assuming I’ll end up self-publishing it (my inner pessimist being what he is). If so, I’ll do one more read-through, then all I’ll need is the covers for e-book and print book. I’ll wait until about July 1 for the editor, then forge ahead.

My regular column for Buildipedia.com is being cut from twice a month to once a month beginning in July. Bummer. I’ve been enjoying the money from it. I’m actually thinking of pulling some of those thoughts together and writing a construction administration book, maybe in 2013 or 2014. The columns I did are considered work-for-hire, so I can’t use them verbatim.

And, I prepared and uploaded my first article for Decoded Science, a re-work of an article I did for Suite101.com. But the DecSci policy has changed since I was approved to write there, and they no longer accept previously published articles. So, back to the drawing board—or the writing board I should say. I have an idea for a short series of articles there. I wasn’t planning on doing the research and writing quite so soon as this, but will think about it.

With my two main projects coming to an end, I’ll soon be moving on to the next one. More on that in the next post.

My Upcoming Writing Schedule

Saturday afternoon I finished reading through In Front of Fifty Thousand Screaming People, marking locations to improve the text. Most of the edits were for typos, improving odd sentence structure, and fixing name problems. By that I mean where I used people’s names too much in dialogue. Also, I found one embarrassing error in a name, where I changed it very early on in the writing but somehow missed one place. The MS Word search and replace feature tells me that was the only straggler.

I finished typing the edits yesterday afternoon. I’ll print it today and set it aside for a couple of weeks. Actually, I’m not sure how long that will be. The editor I e-mailed three chapters and a synopsis to said he was sending the chapters to “readers,” and they would “get back to me in a few weeks.” While I’m reconciled that I will probably self-publish this, I’m willing to delay a little to let that run its course.

Meanwhile, I have to be writing. So yesterday I switched back to my non-fiction work-in-progress, The Candy Store Generation”. I added 400 words to it last night, coming close to finishing Chapter 5, Boomer Corporations. I still have research to do on that, to plug a hole reserved for it about 1/4 of the way into the chapter. But the words are almost done.

I haven’t been thinking of TCSG for over a month, and I’ve actually forgotten where I was in it. I know I’m shooting for 40,000 words, and that I’m at 32,800 now, implying another 7,200 to go. But that word count is a target only. I’m thinking the book may fall short of that and be at a logical concluding point.

I’d really like to get this done and published in time to perhaps ride the coattails of the current election cycle. Not that I think it will be a huge seller or have an impact on the election, but while people’s attention is on politics, it probably has a better chance at success.

Depending on how the research goes, I should be able to have it done in a month or less. I can then take up to a month to edit it, and try to have it published by mid-July. That’s later than I hoped, but it’s doable. I would then try to have FTSP out a couple of weeks later, still well within baseball season.

My plans are then to work on two short stories. One will be in my Danny Tompkins series, on teenage grief. It will probably be the last one. The other will be the first of what could become a series, but which might be a singleton. It will be an espionage story set in Cranston, RI (my hometown), with the heroine having the name of a classmate of mine, with her permission. I’ve written the first two paragraphs of this, and have been plotting it in my mind.

I don’t know where this will lead. If I like the way it turns out, I could turn it into a series, having this female CIA operative go to various places I have been overseas. That would be a way to use these experiences in my writing, something I’ve been wondering how to do.

After that, assuming I’m not brain-dead, I have a choice between three or four projects. I had been thinking about working on another novel, an espionage one, tentatively titled China Tour. I also see a possibility of working on more volumes in the Documenting America brand. I started a little research on what could be a Civil War edition of that. Given that we are at the sesquicentennial of that conflict, the timing is good.

However, I may just go ahead and write a sequel to FTSP. My friend Gary, who was a beta reader, said, “The ending says a lot but leaves much unsaid as well.  That’s a perfect setup for a sequel.” As I wrote in the past, I hadn’t really thought about that, and didn’t consciously write the end to launch a sequel. But I’ve looked at it, and he’s right. When I wrote out, in manuscript, all the loose ends, I came up with more than enough to make a similar length novel. The penultimate scene near the end has come to mine—indeed, I’ve had trouble getting it out of my mind. Even a potential title has reared up.

So that’s where I may be going. No shortage of work. And to think, back in 2000, I just wanted to tell a single story. Now it’s a snowball running downhill.

Again, the best laid plans…

…have gone astray. I have neglected my two blogs. Well, I suppose a Friday to Monday gap is not actually ignoring, but it’s now what I intended. Life got in the way.

Last week I received a subpoena to give a deposition this Wednesday in a lawsuit. I’ve spent most of my working time since in preparation for that, including two hours today with our attorney. We—that is, my employer, CEI Engineering—are not a party to the lawsuit. It stems from a disagreement between a rival engineering company and their client, who also is our client on certain projects and on this particular project after that client fired that engineer. Complicating this is I functioned as city engineer for the project, and everyone who worked on it for us for the developer has moved on. So I have to give testimony for it all.

I’m not worried about it. I’ve given depositions six or eight times and testified in trials at least five times. But it’s an emotionally draining activity. I was exhausted Tuesday and Wednesday, and was able to add little to my work-in-progress despite having an empty, quiet house.

Wednesday evening I learned that John Grisham’s latest book is a baseball novel, titled Calico Joe. My other work-in-progress is my baseball novel, In Front of Fifty Thousand Screaming People. It was on the shelf, waiting on me to finish my non-fiction work-in-progress and get back to it for the last round of edits before making a decision on self-publishing or submitting it to agents/editors. More on that decision another time.

This caused me to immediately speculate if it wasn’t time to get back on FTSP and get it done. Maybe, just maybe, I could piggyback on Grisham. If people like his baseball novel (which they surely will, and buy it in droves), and if they then go looking around for another baseball novel, perhaps I could pick up some sales if I self publish it as quickly as possible. Or, if I decide to submit it to agents or editors, perhaps they will see that this could piggyback on Grisham and thus be more likely to take it on. Either way, I had to get the edits done ASAP.

It occurred to me that the final edits on FTSP would take less mental energy than adding the final 8,000 words to The Candy Store Generation, so on Thursday I made the switch. I spent that day re-reading some of the book and highlighting places I knew needed to be checked.

My main concern now is that the exploits of the protagonist make sense relative to a true baseball season. So I took the Cubs schedule this year and entered it into a spreadsheet. I then went through the portions of the book that take place during that season (about 130 pages) and entered them in the spreadsheet.

As expected, I discovered I had several events happening too late in the season. I had a lot of stuff bunched up in August and September and almost nothing in June and July. Maybe readers wouldn’t notice that, but maybe some would. I want to have it accurate, and reasonable for what can be done with wins and losses at every point in a season.

On Saturday I went through about 60 percent of the pages, finishing the other 40 percent on Sunday. I entered the critical items on the spreadsheet, found them bunched, and on Sunday moved the events to earlier in the season to spread them out. I also marked the manuscript printout with the areas I need to fix, as well as with a number of other changes that I see as improvements.

Now, tonight, I type the changes already marked and begin the process of fixing the places that need fixing. I suspect this will take three or four days. That then gives me a week before the writers conference in Oklahoma City and the opportunity to pitch it to agents and editors before pulling the self-publishing trigger. As I say, I’ll write more about that in another post.

And, someday I’ll get back to the chapter descriptions of FTSP.

Advantages of Mixed-up Genres

As I reported in my last post, I had trouble writing this week. Receiving the subpoena to give a deposition in a lawsuit (our company is involved only as witnesses at this point, and all the attorneys believe it will stay that way) resulted in my spending a lot of energy in preparation. Reading through the correspondence on the project made me sad, as I saw things go downhill through the material in my files.

Then there was the problem of the Ford dealership not getting my pick-up repaired. I brought it in for a tune-up last Tuesday, April 10. I didn’t get it back till yesterday, April 19. I covered that long story in a metaphors of life post at my other blog, An Arrow Through the Air.

So I arrived home each night mentally spent and, to a lesser extent, physically exhausted. After simple meals (Lynda is away), went to The Dungeon, in the quiet house, determined to write a thousand or more words. I managed to do that pre-subpoena, but not after.

The Candy Store Generation stared at me from the computer, a mere 4,000 to 10,000 words away from being finished. But I was lucky if I could add 100 words. The mental energy needed to add any significant amount to it just wasn’t there. I was at the point where I need a little more research to flesh out two chapters, and a part of another. With that research in hand I think I can knock out the chapters, but there’s writing to be done on them even without the research; I couldn’t do it.

It wasn’t writer’s block, it was just mental distraction. And tiredness. I spent some time playing mindless computer games, trying to concentrate on reading writing/publishing blogs, but making little progress. Then I remembered: I have another book to work on: In Front of Fifty Thousand Screaming People. I had a review from a beta reader, who made some good suggestions, especially about when I called the protagonist by what name: first only, first diminutive, first nickname, first and last, last only.

That solved my dilemma. Wednesday night I began working through that, and got a little more than half through the book. Thursday night I picked it up again, and finished it, making a few other small edits along the way. I now think I’m consistent with using his name, and have all characters call him by what they would in a real life situations. I had some professional situations where he was called by his first name, when the speaker really would have said his last name.

The book now stands ready for a final read-through—or almost so. I still need to coordinate the hero’s won-loss record as a pitcher, and make sure I have the right number of wins for the time of year. I also have to dial back his number of wins a little, to something that’s extraordinary but still believable. What I had was over the top for the modern baseball era.

Tonight I’ll start the read-through, but will mainly work on the baseball season consistency issues. I expect that to take most of the weekend, including marking whatever edits are needed. That I think my brain can handle, and save the other book until after the deposition.

The experts in the industry say you should stick to one genre, not spread yourself around several. That’s because your “fans”—one you have fans—will be expecting you to produce another book just like the one they already liked. I know I should do that, but in this case I’m glad I had something different to work on, and keep some production going during a difficult time.